FRIDAY SURPRISE: It's all geek to
me.
Friday, September 04, 2009 Filed in:
Friday
Surprise!, History, Technology
One might think that this era in history is the most well
documented that has ever existed. Why, we have photography and
sound recording and movies (and their digital equivalents.)
Everything, it seems, has been saved for posterity. How much better
preserved we are than our forebears!
Yep, you'd think so. And you'd be dead wrong.
There are huge gaps in our archival record, and oddly enough they
have to do with the very things that should be most easily
chronicled: our technology. Obsolete technology is disappearing,
and with it a vital understanding of what we as a species have
accomplished in this world. Decorative arts seem to be deemed
worthy of perpetuation, no matter their relative importance, while
everything else is consigned to the scrap heap.
Take just the computer - there are surprisingly few organizations
who have made an effort to preserve this recent technology. With
programmable computers being no more than about 60 years old, we
should have a very good record of all that has passed in their
development. We don't. Old computers are rare, and the earliest
(physically largest) machines are virtually all gone. Of those
first pioneers we have nothing but a few bad photos and the
occasional fragmentary drawing.
That's just the tip of the iceberg. There are many other gaps in
our historical records through which technologies, people,
organizations, and companies have fallen. There are a few places
attempting to preserve bits and pieces of our technological past,
and one of them is the Southwest Museum of
Engineering, Communications and Computation
(SMECC).
SMECC maintains a fascinating site that gives a good feeling for
the breadth of their collections. Particularly valuable are the
first-person chronicles of the people who actually made the things
in the museum's collection.
A warning: their site is perhaps the worst example of Microsoft
FrontPage design. It's not nice to look at, not well laid out, and
you'll have to poke around to find the gems. It feels like a
throwback to the early '90s internet, which I suppose one could
argue is appropriate for a museum. (With all that, it's still
better than the average MySpace page.)
Any self-respecting geek could easily spend days there. Whether
you're into computers, radios, or microscopes, SMECC has something
for you.
-=[
Grant ]=-